Last week, at his fall menswear show in London, Nasir Mazhar showed slime green mesh tank tops, white sweatpants covered in zippers, and oversize tracksuits as shiny as wet pavement. The designer has said that this sense of wardrobe bombast has long been inspired by the radical electronic music he heard in his youth, specifically the high-energy dance music that proliferated around rave culture, and the grimy and soulful garage songs that were popular on London’s illegal pirate radio stations in the nineties and Y2K era. For a designer like this, no ordinary runway soundtrack will do.

That’s where Kingdom (née Ezra Rubin) comes in. The L.A.-based DJ and producer has created the mix for Mazhar’s fall show, and it’s a hyperactive one, bumping between throbbing beats and noises that conjure laser beams shooting through space. “Nasir’s stuff is great because it’s easy to wear, but it’s also playful and energetic,” Rubin explains in an email. “He wanted something hard and fast, but also emotional and eerie. There’s a lot of pounding bass mixed with violent percussion and gun sounds. He wanted the crowd to feel like they had just gotten out of a rave by the time they left the show, even though it’s only eight minutes long.” In other words, music that sounds as wild as Mazhar’s clothes look. Take a listen.